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Saturday, September 11, 2021 marks the 20th anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon.

They lost loved ones in 9/11. We invited them to leave a voicemail in their memory

Updated May 7, 2025 at 4:48 PM EDT

Voicemails are deeply embedded into memories of 9/11. On that day in 2001, as people all across New York City tried to get hold of their friends and family, cellphone networks were overloaded. And for some of the victims inside the planes and towers, leaving a voicemail was their last way of communicating with their loved ones.

In the weeks leading up to the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, 91¸£Àû set up an old phone booth in Brooklyn Bridge Park — across the river from the new World Trade Center — and invited people to leave a voicemail for someone they lost that day.

By searching public records, reaching out to national survivors' networks, and collaborating with facilitators of 9/11 support groups on Facebook, we connected with six people who were willing to share their stories with us — people like Trish Straine, whose husband died in the north tower just six days after their second son was born; and Matthew Bocchi, who was only 9 years old when he lost his father in the attacks. Their individual experiences offer insight into the nature of grief and how it changes — or doesn't — over time.

This project is inspired by the , a phone booth set up in Japan by garden designer Itaru Sasaki for people to communicate with those they lost in the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami.

Copyright 2025 91¸£Àû

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Mito Habe-Evans
Mito Habe-Evans (she/her) co-manages 91¸£Àû's Video team and is responsible for the creative direction and sensibility of 91¸£Àû videos. She leads the team in its pursuit of projects that are smart with heart, from the comedic economics explainer series Planet Money Shorts to the short film Senior Spring, a national portrait of teens and guns. She developed 91¸£Àû's signature documentary style with What Democracy Looks Like and One Nation Under The Sun.
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Tsering Bista
Annabel Edwards
Trisha Pickelhaupt
Nick Michael is the Acting Supervising Editor for Video at 91¸£Àû. He joined 91¸£Àû in 2014 as the lead video producer for Jazz Night in America, 91¸£Àû's first program with companion radio and video content. Jazz Night's 2017 portfolio earned a Peabody nomination and a Webby Award for Online Film & Video. Since then, he has co-managed the growth of 91¸£Àû's award-winning video team, highlights of which include co-crafting the look of 91¸£Àû's signature interviews with President Obama, leading 91¸£Àû's experimentation with 360 video and audio and coordinating 22 filmmakers across the country to document 2017's solar eclipse. Before 91¸£Àû, Michael co-founded 1504, a creative video studio now based in Birmingham, Ala. He earned a masters in photojournalism at the Missouri School of Journalism.
Bronson Arcuri is a video producer at 91¸£Àû, where he directs the Planet Money Shorts video series and helps out with Tiny Desk Concerts from time to time. He also produced Elise Tries and Ron's Office Hours along with the Junior Bugler series, which he still insists was pretty good for what it was.
Becky Lettenberger